From August 2009, all doctors were subject to the European Working Time Directive (EWTD) restrictions of 48 hours of work per week. Changes to rota patterns have been introduced over the last two years to accommodate for these impending changes, sacrificing ‘normal working hours’ training opportunities for out-of-hours service provision. We have analysed the elogbook data to establish whether
Background: From August 2009, all doctors were subject to the European Working Time Directive (EWTD) restrictions of 48 hours of work per week. Changes to rota patterns have been introduced over the last two years to accommodate for these impending changes, sacrificing ‘normal working hours’ training opportunities for out-of-hours service provision. We have analysed the elogbook data to establish whether
Background. Every trainee in Trauma and Orthopaedics (T&O) in the UK and Ireland records their
It has been suggested that recent reduction in hours worked by orthopaedic trainees in the UK may result in less exposure to operative procedures. To examine this possible change, operative data showing the participation of specialist registrars in orthopaedic trauma cases were examined over 6-month periods in 2002 and 2007. Operations specifically examined included dynamic hip screw, hip hemiarthroplasty, manipulation under anaesthetic, ankle fracture fixation, and tension band wiring. A traditional on-call system was used throughout but the number of working hours was reduced. Analysing individual operations, the results demonstrated a general trend for trainees to perform fewer procedures in the 2007 group, but this difference was not statistically significant. Level of consultant supervision was not significantly different except for hip hemiarthroplasty, which was higher in 2007. When considering all operations together, there was a significant decrease in the number of procedures performed by trainees in 2007, and although there was a trend for more supervision, this was not significant. Trainees were present for a significantly lower proportion of procedures in 2007 than 2002. We conclude that it appears
Case logs have been utilized as a means of assessing residents surgical exposure and involvement in cases. It can be argued that the degree of involvement in operative cases is as important as absolute number of cases logged. A log which contains accurate information on actual participation in surgical cases in addition to self reported competency, is a powerful tool in obtaining a true reflection of surgical experience. Thus a prerequisite for a valuable log is the ability to perform an accurate self-assessment. Numerous studies have shown mixed results when examining residents ability to perform self-assessment on varying tasks. The purpose of the study was to examine the correlation between residents self-assessment and staff surgeons evaluation of surgical involvement and competence in performing primary hip and knee arthroplasty surgery. Self assessment data from 65 primary hip and knee arthroplasty cases involving 17 residents and 17 staff surgeons (93% response rate) was analyzed. Interobserver agreement between residents self perception and staff surgeons assessment of involvement was evaluated using the Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC). An assessment of competency was performed utilizing a categorical global scale and evaluated with the Kappa statistic (k). Furthermore, a structured surgical skills assessment form was piloted as an objective appraisal of resident involvement and comparisons were made to resident and staff perception.Purpose
Method
The aim of this study was to explore differences in operative autonomy by trainee gender during orthopaedic training in Ireland and the UK, and to explore differences in operative autonomy by trainee gender with regard to training year, case complexity, index procedures, and speciality area. This retrospective cohort study examined all operations recorded by orthopaedic trainees in Ireland and the UK between July 2012 and July 2022. The primary outcome was operative autonomy, which was defined as the trainee performing the case without the supervising trainer scrubbed.Aims
Methods
In June 2012 the Orthopaedic Speciality Advisory of the Joint Committee on Surgical Training defined ‘minimum indicative numbers’ that trainees would have to meet before completion of specialist training. It has been speculated that regions have varied in their ability to provide operative opportunities to their trainees. This study aims to test the hypothesis that there are regional differences in
Introduction: In August 2007, the Department of Health initiative Modernising Medical Careers was implemented. This was a system of reform and development in postgraduate medical education and training. In preparation for the changes, the SAC for T&
O outlined a new curriculum. The emphasis of early training, StR years 1 and 2, was to be trauma. We aim to identify how effectively the SAC proposals are being applied, and what difference this makes to the trainees’
Since 2003 Trauma and Orthopaedic trainees in the UK and Ireland have routinely submitted data recording their
Centre Hospitalo-Universitaire de Lille, Service de Neurochirurgie et Chirurgie du Rachis, Lille, France. Assessment of current thoughts regarding spinal fellowships amongst spinal fellows in the United Kingdom and abroad. Qualitative analysis provides rich and contextual detail that cannot be borne out by quantitative research. We undertook detailed interviews amongst fellows who have varying fellowship experience both in the United Kingdom and abroad. Ten fellows, all of whom were approaching their Certificate of Completion of Training (or equivalent) in Trauma and Orthopaedic surgery, or just awarded the certificate. All undertaking/undertaken at least one 12-month fellowship. Qualitative experiences. A large unit provides a breadth of pathology that may is usually not encountered in smaller units. Fellows who worked in such units felt confident that they would recognise a variety of pathologies, but did not necessarily feel confident in their surgical management. Operative exposure to deformity surgery, whilst not necessarily a future part of practice, was felt useful for the added technical skills it provides. Fellows attending a smaller unit, where they may have been the sole ‘spinal fellow’, reported greater satisfaction in
To evaluate if, for orthopaedic trainees, additional cadaveric simulation training or standard training alone yields superior radiological and clinical outcomes in patients undergoing dynamic hip screw (DHS) fixation or hemiarthroplasty for hip fracture. This was a preliminary, pragmatic, multicentre, parallel group randomized controlled trial in nine secondary and tertiary NHS hospitals in England. Researchers were blinded to group allocation. Overall, 40 trainees in the West Midlands were eligible: 33 agreed to take part and were randomized, five withdrew after randomization, 13 were allocated cadaveric training, and 15 were allocated standard training. The intervention was an additional two-day cadaveric simulation course. The control group received standard on-the-job training. Primary outcome was implant position on the postoperative radiograph: tip-apex distance (mm) (DHS) and leg length discrepancy (mm) (hemiarthroplasty). Secondary clinical outcomes were procedure time, length of hospital stay, acute postoperative complication rate, and 12-month mortality. Procedure-specific secondary outcomes were intraoperative radiation dose (for DHS) and postoperative blood transfusion requirement (hemiarthroplasty).Aims
Methods
Open reduction of DDH is indicated in late presenting cases and those who fail Pavlik Harness treatment, if closed reduction is unsuccessful. Recognised techniques involve excision of the ligamentum teres to allow maximal medialisation of the femoral head into the acetabulum. We describe a new technique in which the ligament’s femoral attachment is preserved and the medial end is passed through the incised transverse ligament. Gentle traction on the medial end is used to aid reduction and when sutured to the anterior capsule, the reduction is stabilised. We present our
Surgery for spinal deformity was previously carried out only in teaching hospitals in the United Kingdom. With increasing numbers of patients especially adults, seeking treatment for spinal deformity, the number of centres offering treatment for spinal deformity is going to have to increase. The deformity part of the Spinal Surgical Service in the District General Hospital in Taunton started in 2005. This paper is an audit of this deformity service. It looks at two key areas – that of patient satisfaction and patient reported outcomes of surgery. Patient satisfaction was assessed by a validated questionnaire that evaluated a patient's perception of consultations, consent, preoperative assessment, operative and post
Purpose: To describe
An online survey has been carried out to evaluate the compliance with the OCAP learning tools, and the availability of clinical experience to early years’ trainees in Trauma and Orthopaedics in 2007–8. Three surveys were planned over the year, and we present the results from the first two surveys. Over the initial eight month period, 335 trainees in Trauma and Orthopaedic posts responded. There was considerable variation in the proportion of responses from different deaneries, and it was felt this reflected differences in the use of the two logbooks available (FHI or ISCP). Respondents were FTSTAs (50%), ST1s (11%) and ST2s (29%). The respondents reported their
Introduction: The assessment of quality in the provision of healthcare is one of the core features of the National Health Service in the 21st Century. From April 2009 Patient Reported Outcome Measure (PROM) data are being collected for the Department of Health for elective hip and knee arthroplasty using generic and disease specific measures of health status. The perceived uses of these data may be for research, assessment of procedural outcome, measures of health inequalities and to aid commissioning groups in selecting their secondary care providers. Foot and ankle surgery covers a wide spectrum of operative procedures with patient responses less predictable than with major joint arthroplasty. We report the use of a sixteen point satisfaction-based questionnaire in order to investigate the nature of patient outcome after the processes of foot and ankle surgery. Methods: A prospective series of 100 two-part Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) questionnaires was distributed to patients undergoing elective foot and ankle surgery at the Northern General Hospital under the care of four foot and ankle surgeons over a three-month period. The questionnaires were numbered to allow patient anonymity. The first part of nine questions enquired about pre-operative preparation and information and was distributed before surgery. The second part of seven questions, distributed at the first post-operative clinic sought to investigate their hospital and
Introduction. Malpositioning of the tibial component is a common error in TKR. In theory, placement of the tibial tray could be improved by optimization of its design to more closely match anatomic features of the proximal tibia with the motion axis of the knee joint. However, the inherent variability of tibial anatomy and the size increments required for a non-custom implant system may lead to minimal benefit, despite the increased cost and size of inventory. This study was undertaken to test the hypotheses:
. 1. That correct placement of the tibial component is influenced by the design of the implant. 2. The
Aims: The aims of this prospective study was to elucidate, how the high tibial opening wedge osteotomy (OW-HTO) corrected the varus angle of the lower extremity to the desired valgus angle in arthrotic knee joint, and what are the typical complications concerning this operation method. Methods: Twenty-one patients were operated on by using the operation technique (Puddu 1998) from September 1999 to August 2000. Results: The mean preoperative femoro-tibial varus-angle of the þrst 21 patients was 1.4. degrees, immediate postoperative valgus-angle was 7.1 degrees and at the latest follow-up, the valgus angle was 5.6 degrees, respectively. In 16 of these 21 patients the healing was uneventful. Five patients sustained complications. Three patients had fracture of the opposite tibial lateral cortex peroperatively. Two of these fractures healed without complication. One of these patients needed total knee arthroplasty later on because of pseudoarthrosis and loss of OW-HTO correction angle at the osteotomy site. Two patients sustained peroperative þssural fracture up to the lateral tibial joint articulation surface. These fractures healed uneventfully. Conclusion: A group of young, active heavy patients sustaining varus gonarthro-sis are candidates for HTO. After promising results of these 21 OW-HTO operations, we have operated 34 more patients. Complication rate has dropped because of better
Introduction: The ten-year survivorship of Oxford Unicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty (OUKA) has ranged from 98% in the hands of the developers to only 82–90% in reports from independent centers and national registries. This study was performed to investigate the effects of surgeon training and correct patient selection on the expected outcome of this procedure. Methods: We created a computer-simulated joint registry consisting of 20 surgeons who performed OUKA on 1,000 patients. Mathematical models of the patient and surgeon populations and corresponding hazard functions were formulated using data from the Swedish and Australian joint registries. The long-term survivorship of UKA was assumed to average 94% at 10 years and was modeled as the product of hazard functions quantifying risk factors under the surgeon’s control, risk factors presented by the patient, and the inherent revision risk of the procedure. We performed four simulations looking at the effect of surgeon training by pairing surgeons and patients based on surgeon experience and patient risk factors. Results: When experienced surgeons (>
40 cases) performed OUKA on low risk patients (bottom quintile), the revision rate dropped from 6.0% to 4.5%. The same surgeons had a revision rate of 7.5% when assigned to the highest risk patient group (top quintile). Conversely, when the least experienced surgeons (<
10 cases) selected the least fit patients, the revision rate increased from 6% to 8.25%. However, when these surgeons were assigned to the lowest risk group, only 5.25% of patients were revised. Taken simultaneously, these results indicate that the overall revision rate of this procedure can vary between 4.5% to 8.25%, depending upon the experience of the surgeon and the patients selected. Conclusions:. Mathematical models of patients and surgeons can be built using joint registry data. These models can then be used in a computer simulation yielding results comparable to what has been reported in the literature. The outcome of Oxford UKA is primarily determined by the skill of the surgeon in selecting suitable patients rather than
Introduction: Although Hip Resurfacing Arthroplasty (HRA) has become a popular alternative to THR, the outcome of these procedures varies extensively between centres. This has been attributed to variations in patient selection, surgical experience, and patient volume. In this study we examine the effect of hospital volume on the outcome of hip resurfacing using a national database. Methods: We examined data collected by the Australian Joint Registry between September 1999 and December 2006 relating to 8945 hip resurfacing procedures performed in 196 hospitals. Survivorship of the implanted components was calculated with revision as the end-point. The cumulative rate of revision at 4 years was compared between hospitals as a function of the number of cases performed during the study period (<
25, 25–49, 50–100, >
100 procedures). Using the log-rank test, differences in the risk of revision, corrected for age and sex of patients, were compared for low (<
25 cases) vs. higher volume centres (>
25 cases). We also estimated the number of cases/year of each centre and examined its apparent impact on revision rate. Results: The majority (74%) of hospitals reporting performed less than 30 resurfacing procedures over the 7 year study period, with 64% of procedures performed at 16 “high volume” hospitals (>
100 cases), Overall, 249 of the 8945 resurfacing procedures (2.9%) were performed for revision of the original components. At 4 years, the cumulative revision rate dropped from 5.8% for hospitals performing less than 50 cases to 4.7% (50–99 cases) and 2.7% (>
100 cases) for larger volume centres. When adjusted for differences in patient age and sex, the risk of revision was 66% higher in hospitals performing <
25 cases. Based on the available data, the gap in revision rate between high and low volume centres is reduced by 50% once a surgeon’s operative volume exceeds 6 cases per year. On average, this corresponds to a learning curve of approximately 5 cases. Conclusions: In this study, hospital volume is primarily a reflection of the